Gas Suspension Effects in Riser Unloading and Appropriate Modelling Approaches

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dalila Gomes ◽  
Kjell K\xe5re Fjelde ◽  
Knut Steinar Bj\xf8rkevoll ◽  
Johnny Fr\xf8yen
Author(s):  
Dalila Gomes ◽  
Kjell Kåre Fjelde ◽  
Knut Steinar Bjørkevoll ◽  
Johnny Frøyen

Abstract A kick entering a drilling riser and expanding upwards uncontrolled can lead to severe consequences such as riser unloading and riser collapse, and in the worst case a blowout scenario may evolve. If the riser is filled with water-based mud, the kick will normally migrate on its own to surface, but it has been observed both in small scale experiments and in field tests that small amounts of gas are trapped by the mud during the kick migration. In some cases, the kick is not able to reach the surface without additional circulation. Hence, a certain kick size may or may not lead to an unloading scenario depending on the effect of gas suspension in the drilling fluid. In this paper, two different modelling approaches for describing the unloading scenario will be compared and the differences will be highlighted. In the first approach, the single bubble model will be considered. Here the gas bubble is assumed to occupy the whole cross-sectional area, and it is fully separated from the mud regions. This will be solved by two different calculations methods, one that is taken from literature and one that is based on a shooting technique. The second and recommended approach is to use a transient drift flux model, which includes friction, acceleration terms, and gas slip. For the gas slippage model, different flow patterns will be accounted for, as will the suspension effect that causes small amounts of gas to be trapped by the mud. The drift flux model will be solved numerically using the explicit AUSMV scheme. The impact of gas suspension will be studied by varying the onset for gas suspension to determine from simulations whether a riser will be unloaded or the kick become fully trapped in the riser. In addition, a sensitivity analysis will be presented where kick size, riser ID and riser length are varied to determine when the riser will be unloaded. The different simulations presented solves physical equations of the unloading scenario to calculate pressure at BOP, displaced mud volume (pit gain), liquid mass in well, surface rates, riser friction, and depth profiles of the gas distribution at a certain time. the tables provide a comprehensive overview of which combinations of parameters lead to a trapped gas scenario or and which lead to unloading the riser. It is shown that a fully transient drift flux model can cover a vast range of different situations e.g. gas becomes fully trapped in the riser, the riser becomes fully unloaded, and situations where only a very small part of the kick reaches the surface. The simulations show how the dynamics of the scenarios are quite different. A single bubble model will not have this capability.


2003 ◽  
Vol 34 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu. Ya. Pechenegov ◽  
O. Yu. Pechenegova

2003 ◽  
Vol 1 (01) ◽  
pp. 441-445
Author(s):  
I. Zubia ◽  
◽  
S.K. Salman ◽  
X. Ostolaza ◽  
G. Tapia ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiming Zhao ◽  
Huy van Nguyen ◽  
Louise Male ◽  
Philip Craven ◽  
Benjamin R. Buckley ◽  
...  

<div>Twelve 1,5-disubtituted and fourteen 5-substituted 1,2,3-triazole derivatives bearing diaryl or dialkyl phosphines at the 5-position were synthesised and used as ligands for palladium-catalysed Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reactions. Bulky substrates were tested, and lead-like product formation was demonstrated. The online tool SambVca 2.0 was used to assess steric parameters of ligands and preliminary buried volume determination using XRD obtained data in a small number of cases proved to be informative. Two modelling approaches were compared for the determination of</div><div>the buried volume of ligands where XRD data was not available. An approach with imposed steric restrictions was found to be superior in leading to buried volume determinations that closely correlate with observed reaction conversions. The online tool LLAMA was used to determine lead-likeness of potential Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling products, from which ten of the most lead-like were successfully synthesised. Thus, confirming these readily accessible triazole-containing phosphines as highly suitable ligands for reaction screening and optimisation in drug discovery campaigns.</div>


1995 ◽  
Vol 31 (7) ◽  
pp. 107-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ole Mark ◽  
Cecilia Appelgren ◽  
Torben Larsen

A study has been carried out with the objectives of describing the effect of sediment deposits on the hydraulic capacity of sewer systems and to investigate the sediment transport in sewer systems. A result of the study is a mathematical model MOUSE ST which describes sediment transport in sewers. This paper discusses the applicability and the limitations of various modelling approaches and sediment transport formulations in MOUSE ST. Further, the paper presents a simple application of MOUSE ST to the Rya catchment in Gothenburg, Sweden.


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